Thirty years ago, it all
seemed very clear.
"American Planes Hit North Vietnam
After Second Attack on Our Destroyers; Move Taken to Halt New
Aggression", announced a Washington
Post headline on Aug. 5, 1964.
That same day,
the front page of the New York
Times reported: "President Johnson has ordered
retaliatory action against gunboats and 'certain supporting
facilities in North Vietnam' after renewed attacks against
American destroyers in the Gulf of Tonkin."
But there
was no "second attack" by North Vietnam � no "renewed attacks
against American destroyers." By reporting official claims as
absolute truths, American journalism opened the floodgates for
the bloody Vietnam War.
A pattern took hold: continuous
government lies passed on by pliant mass media...leading to
over 50,000 American deaths and millions of Vietnamese
casualties.
The official story was that North
Vietnamese torpedo boats launched an "unprovoked attack"
against a U.S. destroyer on "routine patrol" in the Tonkin
Gulf on Aug. 2 � and that North Vietnamese PT boats followed
up with a "deliberate attack" on a pair of U.S. ships two days
later.
The truth was very different.
Rather than
being on a routine patrol Aug. 2, the U.S. destroyer Maddox
was actually engaged in aggressive intelligence-gathering
maneuvers � in sync with coordinated attacks on North Vietnam
by the South Vietnamese navy and the Laotian air
force.
"The day before, two attacks on North
Vietnam...had taken place," writes scholar Daniel C. Hallin.
Those assaults were "part of a campaign of increasing military
pressure on the North that the United States had been pursuing
since early 1964."
On the night of Aug. 4, the Pentagon
proclaimed that a second attack by North Vietnamese PT boats
had occurred earlier that day in the Tonkin Gulf � a report
cited by President Johnson as he went on national TV that
evening to announce a momentous escalation in the war: air
strikes against North Vietnam.
But Johnson ordered U.S.
bombers to "retaliate" for a North Vietnamese torpedo attack
that never happened.
Prior to the U.S. air strikes, top
officials in Washington had reason to doubt that any Aug. 4
attack by North Vietnam had occurred. Cables from the U.S.
task force commander in the Tonkin Gulf, Captain John J.
Herrick, referred to "freak weather effects," "almost total
darkness" and an "overeager sonarman" who "was hearing ship's
own propeller beat."
One of the Navy pilots flying
overhead that night was squadron commander James Stockdale,
who gained fame later as a POW and then Ross Perot's vice
presidential candidate. "I had the best seat in the house to
watch that event," recalled Stockdale a few years ago, "and
our destroyers were just shooting at phantom targets � there
were no PT boats there.... There was nothing there but black
water and American fire power."
In 1965, Lyndon Johnson
commented: "For all I know, our Navy was shooting at whales
out there."
But Johnson's deceitful speech of Aug. 4,
1964, won accolades from editorial writers. The president,
proclaimed the New York Times,
"went to the American people last night with the somber
facts." The Los Angeles Times
urged Americans to "face the fact that the Communists, by
their attack on American vessels in international waters, have
themselves escalated the hostilities."
An exhaustive
new book, The War Within: America's Battle Over
Vietnam, begins with a dramatic account of the Tonkin Gulf
incidents. In an interview, author Tom Wells told us that
American media "described the air strikes that Johnson
launched in response as merely `tit for tat' � when in reality
they reflected plans the administration had already drawn up
for gradually increasing its overt military pressure against
the North."
Why such inaccurate news coverage? Wells
points to the media's "almost exclusive reliance on U.S.
government officials as sources of information" � as well as
"reluctance to question official pronouncements on 'national
security issues.'"
Daniel Hallin's classic book The "Uncensored War" observes that
journalists had "a great deal of information available which
contradicted the official account [of Tonkin Gulf events]; it
simply wasn't used. The day before the first incident, Hanoi
had protested the attacks on its territory by Laotian aircraft
and South Vietnamese gunboats."
What's more, "It was
generally known...that `covert' operations against North
Vietnam, carried out by South Vietnamese forces with U.S.
support and direction, had been going on for some
time."
In the absence of independent journalism, the
Gulf of Tonkin Resolution � the closest thing there ever was
to a declaration of war against North Vietnam � sailed through
Congress on Aug. 7. (Two courageous senators, Wayne Morse of
Oregon and Ernest Gruening of Alaska, provided the only "no"
votes.) The resolution authorized the president "to take all
necessary measures to repel any armed attack against the
forces of the United States and to prevent further
aggression."
The rest is tragic history.
Nearly
three decades later, during the Gulf War, columnist Sydney
Schanberg warned journalists not to forget "our unquestioning
chorus of agreeability when Lyndon Johnson bamboozled us with
his fabrication of the Gulf of Tonkin
incident."
Schanberg blamed not only the press but also
"the apparent amnesia of the wider American
public."
And he added: "We Americans are the ultimate
innocents. We are forever desperate to believe that this time
the government is telling us the truth."
[Return to Media
Beat archive]
